माधव! निश्चय ही दैवके लिये कोई भी कार्य अधिक कठिन नहीं है; क्योंकि उसने क्षत्रियोंद्वारा ही इन शूरवीर क्षत्रियशिरोमणियोंका संहार कर डाला है ।। तदैव निहता: कृष्ण मम पुत्रास्तरस्विन: । यदैवाकृतकामस्त्वमुपप्लव्यं गत: पुन:,श्रीकृष्ण! मेरे वेगशाली पुत्र तो उसी दिन मार डाले गये, जब कि तुम अपूर्णमनोरथ होकर पुन: उपप्लव्यको लौट गये थे
tadaiva nihatāḥ kṛṣṇa mama putrās tarasvinaḥ | yadaivākṛtakāmas tvaṃ upaplavyaṃ gataḥ punaḥ ||
Vaiśaṃpāyana said: “O Kṛṣṇa, my swift and valiant sons were slain that very day—on the very occasion when you, your purpose unfulfilled, returned again to Upaplavya. The course of events shows how inexorable destiny can be, bringing about the destruction of even the foremost warriors through the very agency of kṣatriyas themselves.”
वैशम्पायन उवाच
The verse underscores the inexorability of daiva (destiny) in the aftermath of war: even the strongest are swept away, and human plans—even Kṛṣṇa’s diplomatic efforts—may remain unfulfilled when the larger moral and cosmic momentum has turned toward destruction.
In the lament-filled context of the Strī Parva, the narrator reports a grief-stricken recollection addressed to Kṛṣṇa: the speaker’s sons were killed on the very day Kṛṣṇa returned to Upaplavya without achieving his intended aim—an allusion to the failure of peace efforts and the immediate slide into catastrophic slaughter.